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Tools for Action & Advocacy. Connecting CGCPs & School Improvement Plans Northwest Nazarene University Monday , February 10 th , 2014 Materials & Handouts available at: http://richardcleveland.me /. Game Plan for Tonight. What is a SIP?
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Tools for Action & Advocacy Connecting CGCPs & School Improvement Plans Northwest Nazarene University Monday, February 10th, 2014 Materials & Handouts available at: http://richardcleveland.me/
Game Plan for Tonight • What is a SIP? • Why does the SIP matter for PSCs? • Real-Life Pretend Activity • Discussion & Questions
Doris Heritage • 14 US Track titles • 5 World Cross Country titles • Competed in multiple Olympics • Coached multiple Olympic teams
What is a SIP? • School Improvement Plan • 2002 NCLB • “No Child Left Behind requires each state to define adequate yearly progress for school districts and schools, within the parameters set by Title I. In defining adequate yearly progress, each state sets the minimum levels of improvement--measurable in terms of student performance--that school districts and schools must achieve within time frames specified in the law. In general, it works like this: Each state begins by setting a "starting point" that is based on the performance of its lowest-achieving demographic group or of the lowest-achieving schools in the state, whichever is higher. The state then sets the bar--or level of student achievement--that a school must attain after two years in order to continue to show adequate yearly progress. Subsequent thresholds must be raised at least once every three years, until, at the end of 12 years, all students in the state are achieving at the proficient level on state assessments in reading/language arts and math.” From http://www2.ed.gov/nclb/accountability/schools/accountability.html#4
NCLB Trigonometry “proficient” Student Achievement 2002 2010 2014
Trickle-Down Theory • Federal Government (NCLB) • State Government • LEA/School District
SIP Content Areas • Non-Negotiables • Reading & Math • Additional Academics • Writing, Science, etc. • Other • Welcoming Environment/Diversity • Safety • On-Time Graduation • Attendance • Title I Plan Integration
Paperwork Burden Statement “The time required to complete this information collection is estimated to average 336 hours per response, including the time to review instructions, search existing data resources, gather the data needed, and complete and review the information collection.”
Washington NCLB Waiver • Relieves AYP rules • Eliminates school choice financial requirements • As an alternative to AYP, goals are measured in terms of achievement/proficiency gaps • States applying must: • College & Career-ready • Accountability & Support • Effective Instruction • Reducing Duplication
Idaho • Star-Rating for Schools and School Improvement • SMART Goals • Similar focus on academics & other areas (e.g. climate) • http://www.sde.idaho.gov/site/schoolImprovement
So Why Does the SIP Matter? • Federal Mandate • Title I (money & helicopters) • Vision • Guiding Document for Staff • Shelf-marker or living document? • PSC Advocacy • Principal Evaluation • SIP is the “New Data” • ESEA/NCLB Waiver Requirements
A Starting Idea • WASL deficit in Science area of “Systems” • SIP identified supporting activities • Classroom Guidance Lessons • Primary • Reinforce vocabulary and GLAD TPR • Intermediate • Providing social situations as a context
Connecting CGCP to the SIP PROs CONs • Intentional activities • Aligned with site mission (SIP) • Accountability • Advocacy • Lots of work • Correlation ≠ Causation • Who cares? • No fanfare
Real-Life Pretend Activity Elementary Level Junior/High School Level • Increase student attendance • Reduce classroom behavior / discipline referrals • Implement grade-level formative assessment for reading curriculum • Create/implement intervention support for new district math curriculum • Reduce number of drop-outs • Increase enrollment in advanced placement (IB) courses • Target intervention support for state assessment sub-groups (i.e. ELL, SPED, etc.) • Refine processes to insure students are placed in appropriate math classes
Real-Life Pretend Activity Elementary Level Junior/High School Level • Increase student attendance • Reduce classroom behavior / discipline referrals • Implement grade-level formative assessment for reading curriculum • Create/implement intervention support for new district math curriculum • Reduce number of drop-outs • Increase enrollment in advanced placement (IB) courses • Target intervention support for state assessment sub-groups (i.e. ELL, SPED, etc.) • Refine processes to insure students are placed in appropriate math classes
Recap • The School Improvement Plan (SIP) is a guiding document for the school. • PSCs can align and connect their CGCPs with the SIP for data, accountability, energy, momentum and advocacy.
Thank You Richard E. Cleveland, PhD Accreditation/Assessment Assistant Adjunct Instructor Seattle Pacific University (206)281.2384 rclevela@spu.edu http://richardcleveland.me Twitter: RichieKinz